25 Material Design Examples You’ll Love

Material Design is a visual language that synthesizes the base principles of good design and combines them with the innovation of modern science and technology.

Here are some Material design examples we loved. Each one of these follows the Material design trends and principles and has something unique to teach you.

If you’re a fan of the cleanliness of Material design user interfaces, then you’ll love this list. We gathered here concepts for both apps and websites, with different color palettes, structures and layouts. Enjoy!

Here is a mock-up website based on the Material design trends. It successfully combines vibrant neon colors in an innovative way. Who would have thought yellow, blue and purple go so well together in the same color palette?!

This is the design of a content strategy tool. It has a vibrantly colored user interface with simple and carefully detailed elements. It contains a progress and activity indicator that is a visual indication of steps the user needs to take in order to use the app.

This is a cool system created for the Tec Mobile company. Its purpose is to provide a clean event management experience, making it easy and fast, both for the event organizer and for the employees who are working there. The design follows the Material trends and includes an administrative web system and apps for tablets and mobiles.

This is the redesign concept for Sens Critique, a French cultural app you can use to discover, rate and comment movies, series, music, books, and more. It contains grid lists – an alternative to standard list views, which improve the visual understanding of the content they offer.

Here are some screens examples for the Zendesk Mobile SDK on Android. It contains a floating action button that represents the primary action in the app. it is circle-shaped, with an icon in the middle, floating above the UI on the bottom right corner of the screen.

Material design takes its inspiration from print-based design elements – such as typography, color, and imagery – and adapts it to the web to create hierarchy and focus. This is exactly what the design below does, with its baseline grids and structural templates. It offers a consistent solution by repeating visual elements and structural grids.